Wow what an incredible piece! So much beauty and longing. You can see here the extent of Wagner's understanding of harmony and its effect on the listener. The phrase that always brings me to tears is starting from 1:00, finally resting at 1:18. What a gorgeous 9th!
My orchestra is playing this at the end of the year. We are also playing Tchaikovsky 5th Symphony. This looks a lot simpler! It's hard to play something simple, though, without making a mess.
Beeethoven's school, even Bach's. Wagner was the most economic on opera material there was. Wagner was so simple after all. He had very big help and he did the most of it. Light
Incredible harmony work. I'm amazed... Moment at 17:42 - 17:47 is like a heart of the whole composition, it is a painful pleasure! I love Wagner and i love how he accents moments of the most beautiful chord and intellectual tension. This music makes me shiver.. it is so human, so close, i'm happy through tears and crying through joy.
" I'm amazed..." FU. Just shut up and listen. What do you even know about Wagner or Sigfride? You are traying to be so intelectual and you are just stupid. Just for once, shut up listen till you are 50 years old at least. Then we talk.
"most beautiful chord and intellectual tension" Dude? For real?! Do you even know who Wagner or Sigfried was or were? My man was building Movie Teathers on 1860S
What a birthday gift to receive. Aparently the trumpeter done rehearsals in the middle of a lake in order to no give the secret away.Fantastic story for a remarkable piece.
Absolutely fantastic. I am short of words! The details, phrasing, tension and expressiveness are very difficult to achieve. He knew what and how to get from the strings unbelievably. Impossible to match this! What a Master.
It is interesting to see how Wagner incorporated a few leitmotifs from the "Ring": The music at 0:21 is taken from the love duet between Brünnhilde and Siegfried at the end of "Siegfried". The sleep-motif from the finale of "Die Walküre" can be heard in the flute at 2:37, followed by slight variations; it returns in the oboe at 14:46. The horn plays a love-motif from "Siegfried" at 13:38 and reprises it at 19:52. The figure in the strings at 14:13 is a motif of bliss from the third act of "Siegfried". The call of the forest bird from the second act of "Siegfried" is used at 15:30, followed by its prophetic warning at 15:35. In conclusion, Wagner used motifs related to love, peace and nature, as one would deem fitting for a birthday present.
@@pepijnstreng4643 To quote Wikipedia: The composition of Acts I and II [of Siegfried] was completed by August 1857. Wagner then left off work on Siegfried to write the operas Tristan und Isolde and Die Meistersinger. He did not resume work on Siegfried until 1869, when he composed the third act. The final revision of the score was undertaken in February 1871. Performance was withheld until the first complete production of the Ring cycle, at Bayreuth in August 1876.
"Ludwig" (1973) brought me here. There is a beautiful scene in the movie dramatizing that special birthday-Christmas, where an orchestra is really playing on the staircase of the mansion the family was living, and Cosima and her children are awakened by the beautiful orchestral music. It really captures the event wonderfully.
No todo en Wagner es épica y grandilocuencia. También hay lugar para obras intimistas. El lado más desconocido de un genio Not all is grandilocuence in Wagner, there is also room for intimist works. The most unknown size of a genius
Celibidache‘s tempo is perfect for that kind of „reprise“ section from 18:46 onwards - I have never heard that descending clarinet more poignantly beautiful.
Regardless of what you may think of the piece itself, this has to rank as one of the greatest presents of all time, maybe THE greatest, especially when one considers the type of person Wagner was most of the time. Hopefully Cosima was appreciative!
Absolutely. I mostly regret when the singers become involved. It just doesn't sound right: shrieking and growling and one can't understand a word anyway. This piece shows that opera is better without the singers.
@@christianwouters6764 - THIS IS A SPECIAL PIECE HE WROTE FOR HIS NEW WIFE FOR HER BIRTHDAY, AND HE WOKE HER UP TO AN ORCHESTRA PLAYING THIS AT THEIR HOUSE ONE CHRISTMAS MORNING, THIS WAS NEVER ANY PART OF AN OPERA, OR EVER HAD ANY SINGING - MYSELF I LIKE SOME OF THE GREAT OPERA ARIAS, BUT THE SINGING OF DIALOG IN AN OPERA I CAN DO WITHOUT, AND I KNOW WHAT YOU MEAN ABOUT THE SINGERS ....
Conduct minor string groups after 5 years in a conservatory and real love for Wagner this still my favorite. Wagner did this to Impress Nietche in some way. This is perfection even if you dont like it.
Wagner's Siegfrield Idyll and Celibidache conducting are a sublime combination. Celibidache may be unorthodox in some of his slower conducting at times... but you know.. I appreciated it... Celibidache is Celibidache. He forces you to concentrate on the details.
I decided to choose this piece for a BRIEF analysis in my music class. I couldn't help but write a 1000 word analysis just for the piece. The entire piece of word (including Wagner's biography) was 2000 words. His music is surreal, especially this piece that contrasts with his other works. His life is the one thing that bothers me... what a horrible man to write such amazing music!
A horrible man 🤔… Why because he knew and spoke the truth about a certain t r i b e? It’s the 21st century, there is way too much information that exists to remain in the dark!
Wells Cathedral School Showcase Concert on Saturday 4 May 2019 Chamber Music Thomas Nettle (conductor) Springtime highlights from the School’s specialist musicians’ performance programme, including a rare chance to hear Wagner’s ultra-romantic Siegfried Idyll @t
Another of those musical history "what if". What if Wagner could have written more chamber music like this? (The original performance was with solo strings.) I for one would have been happy if he had written those instead of Parsifal.
Wagner has a very big spirit, chamber music can't handle it enough, this piece is very intimate, chamber music is enough for this piece and was a "special edition " for Cosima.. a lot of parts in the dramas of Wagner have chamber parts, solo parts, etc... he is very dynamic, he goes from the easy thing to the maximum. Parsifal was necessary to do contrast with his other works, you see die meistersinger and it's very popular, you see tristan and it's very romantic, you see the nibelungen and you see fantasy and mythology, now needs the epic medieval theme so you get parsifal.. for me is the best drama
In my opinion, Wagners greatest but not only creativity and influence, lies in his innovation and unique handling of ORCHESTRAL music.... perhaps this is taken for granted by the modern listener, but if you place yourself in Wagners time, many of the sound innovations he made had never been heard before..... so... yes he could have written excellent chamber music, but Wagner's greatness lay elsewhere and he knew it.... There are also those who claim Wagner should have written more symphonic work instead of Opera, but again, his Operas allowed him the discriptive vehicle to become as creative in music as he did.... so the "what ifs" come to a dead end and as a composer Wagner made the right decisions at the right time under the right circumstances.
Harry Andruschak If you listen to Wagner’s mature worka in detail you will find that long passages are indeed the chamber music for which you yearn. For example, listen to the Siegmund\Sieglinde scene near the beginning of ‘Die Walkure’ -after the storm opening, Wagner uses a clarinet, a viola, a cello and a horn for much of the accompaniment. Passages like this are scattered throughout The Ring, Tristan und Isolde, Die Meistersinger and Parsifal. The big, powerful sections are the ones most often segmented in concert but there is much which is smaller in scale, more chamber-like and more intimate. Dive in and enjoy!
@@raticida123456 Parsifal was abolutely necessary for Wagner to complete what he had been saying throughout his career. It is a profound spiritual drama and Wagner was profoundly spiritual. He had to leave us the complete testament of his life's journey in music. Parsifal first occurred to him aas a drama in 1845. It was in 1882 he completed it and staged it. He knew, when he started he had alot to say before he could top of his lifework with Parsifal.
"Wagner had never intended to publish this work, but financial problems forced him to make it public in 1877." The man could never hold his money together. He should have gone and take an apprenticeship in accounting and finances with Verdi.
He ain't no Mahler or Strauss but he'll do. Just kidding. Odious creature that he was, he wrote well, there is no denying that. Prelude to Tristan und Isolde is the height of Romanticism and utterly ravishing.
Please watch this at the lowest quality only (144p) since it's just for the music, which is much more ecologically responsible than at a higher rate. Watching this at 240p (which is unnecessary for listening purposes), will increase the bandwith by double to almost tenfold! At 1080 the bandwith is augmented by a factor of 100! The use of digital technology accounts for 4% of the world's greenhouse gas emissions, as much as the emissions from the world's truck fleet. Of that, a BIG part comes from livestreaming videos, mainly 3 sources : UA-cam, Netflix and porn. Let's enjoy this beautiful music by being aware and responsible, doing our little part in decreasing our carbon footprint and protecting this wonderful planet for the generations to come.
Well, do you really think us, the youtube watchers, numbered in the billions should be responsible for the emissions of youtube? Shouldn't it be youtube's responsibility to use clean energy?
@@kallehed6330 Who is at fault? The prostitute or the client? The drug dealer or the consumer? The guns dealer or the warlord? Well, actually, everyone involved is responsible of their own choices. You are not the one who decides youtube's energy supply strategy, but you CAN choose to watch a video at a lower resolution. There's no such thing as "clean" energy, what you need to understand is that the more the demand of energy is, the higher the stress on the environment will be in order to meet that high demand. Fossil fuels are used because they are extremely energy-intensive (much more so than any other energy source, even nuclear), so they provide enough energy for our high demanding energy needs. It is only by SEVERELY reducing our energy needs that these needs can be able to be met using only carbon-free energy sources.
I don't want to be mean, but Wagner, this piece is just... it doesn't go anywhere, it's just the same theme played over and over again, without any clear development. Like, I like everything that you wrote, it's beautiful, the hamony is longing and epic, the melodies are exceptional, but that's just one part of a composition. You have to do something with it you know, you have to have drama, the music should convey a story, it should be more than just beauty. This composition almost feels like a parody of your own music, like, how terrible can I make the music, while still making people like it, just because "oooh beatiful melodyy". Or maybe I'm just tired of hearing this overly romantic harmony, but idk, this music feels kind of shallow, it doesn't feel "real", it feels fake.
@@j.masonbrown6216 Just listened to it for the first time, I liked it. It's kind of overwhelming, wish there was more silence, still has really great moments. Definitely has an effect on you like a good movie has with it's soundtrack, it definitely feels like a story, something bigger. Interesting Beethoven quote at the end. It moves you, though it kind of gives me a headache as well. I think Strauss should work on the balance, needs more soft parts and less forte definitely. Good piece though
If you had run into Liszt and Wagner when they had association and they invited you to join them for a walk or a dinner or a tree-full chat in the shade or by a winter fire hearth, then you would have had all the art genuine injected into you in those minutes that any (and I mean most who desired to be artists and realistically flatly failed to amount to anything with a subject 'muse) living romantic artist wanted-to-be could capture in all your life of struggle and failure...you would have had their forgotten moment. And would have traded all. ALL, for that moment.
That ending...
It teems with drama, suspense, and gratification in such an inimitably delightful way!
Indeed.
Wow what an incredible piece! So much beauty and longing. You can see here the extent of Wagner's understanding of harmony and its effect on the listener. The phrase that always brings me to tears is starting from 1:00, finally resting at 1:18. What a gorgeous 9th!
Never ceases to amaze how simple this music looks on a score.
And yet, how beautiful it is!
Simple! Try to play😂😂
@@loveviolinespana9736looks can be deceiving
My orchestra is playing this at the end of the year. We are also playing Tchaikovsky 5th Symphony. This looks a lot simpler! It's hard to play something simple, though, without making a mess.
Beeethoven's school, even Bach's. Wagner was the most economic on opera material there was.
Wagner was so simple after all. He had very big help and he did the most of it. Light
Incredible harmony work. I'm amazed... Moment at 17:42 - 17:47 is like a heart of the whole composition, it is a painful pleasure! I love Wagner and i love how he accents moments of the most beautiful chord and intellectual tension. This music makes me shiver.. it is so human, so close, i'm happy through tears and crying through joy.
Its just pure transcendental miracle of beauty and joy
" I'm amazed..." FU.
Just shut up and listen.
What do you even know about Wagner or Sigfride?
You are traying to be so intelectual and you are just stupid.
Just for once, shut up listen till you are 50 years old at least.
Then we talk.
"most beautiful chord and intellectual tension" Dude? For real?!
Do you even know who Wagner or Sigfried was or were?
My man was building Movie Teathers on 1860S
What a birthday gift to receive. Aparently the trumpeter done rehearsals in the middle of a lake in order to no give the secret away.Fantastic story for a remarkable piece.
Wasn’t the trumpeter wagner himself? I seem to remember something like that - he certainly learned something unusual.
@@markhughes7927 i think i remember that the trumpeter was a houseguest with them in the leadup to christmas.
I think it was the horn-player, and it was Hans Richter, iirc, who was to become a great Wagner conductor.
@@markhughes7927 The trumpeter was conductor Hans Richter.
@@MaestroTJS I think it was also the violist
My favorite piece forever; it wrings my heart.
Absolutely fantastic. I am short of words! The details, phrasing, tension and expressiveness are very difficult to achieve. He knew what and how to get from the strings unbelievably. Impossible to match this! What a Master.
You mean Richard Wager, the conductor Sergiu Celibidache, or a combimation of both?
@@clavichord"Richard Wager" 💀
@@clavichordThis commenter is referring to the composer, Richard Wagner.
one of the most perfectly magical and beautiful pieces of music ever 2 my ears
It is interesting to see how Wagner incorporated a few leitmotifs from the "Ring":
The music at 0:21 is taken from the love duet between Brünnhilde and Siegfried at the end of "Siegfried".
The sleep-motif from the finale of "Die Walküre" can be heard in the flute at 2:37, followed by slight variations; it returns in the oboe at 14:46.
The horn plays a love-motif from "Siegfried" at 13:38 and reprises it at 19:52.
The figure in the strings at 14:13 is a motif of bliss from the third act of "Siegfried".
The call of the forest bird from the second act of "Siegfried" is used at 15:30, followed by its prophetic warning at 15:35.
In conclusion, Wagner used motifs related to love, peace and nature, as one would deem fitting for a birthday present.
You say "taken from Siegfried" - in fact, Wagner wrote this 6 years before "Siegfried". So those motifs in Siegfried are taken from this piece!
@@pepijnstreng4643 To quote Wikipedia:
The composition of Acts I and II [of Siegfried] was completed by August 1857. Wagner then left off work on Siegfried to write the operas Tristan und Isolde and Die Meistersinger. He did not resume work on Siegfried until 1869, when he composed the third act. The final revision of the score was undertaken in February 1871. Performance was withheld until the first complete production of the Ring cycle, at Bayreuth in August 1876.
@@mrtchaikovsky well I'll be damned!
5:20 makes me very emotional and then 17:40 makes me even MORE emotional
"Ludwig" (1973) brought me here. There is a beautiful scene in the movie dramatizing that special birthday-Christmas, where an orchestra is really playing on the staircase of the mansion the family was living, and Cosima and her children are awakened by the beautiful orchestral music. It really captures the event wonderfully.
No todo en Wagner es épica y grandilocuencia. También hay lugar para obras intimistas. El lado más desconocido de un genio
Not all is grandilocuence in Wagner, there is also room for intimist works. The most unknown size of a genius
Great performance of a very personal and magical piece.
Dear Olla, Remarkably helpful for my study of composition! Many thanks, as always. Philip
thank you for your effort to make this video! perfect preparation for tomorrow‘s gig ✨
Great last seat dragging at 22:20 😂
I can imagine Celibidache's face as this happened
Amazing lovely pastoral sounds from the Great Wagner
I have to play this song in for orchestra this year, and the score looks really simple, yet the song is so beautiful :)
Geniale interpretazione !!! La migliore che abbia sentito.
Celibidache‘s tempo is perfect for that kind of „reprise“ section from 18:46 onwards - I have never heard that descending clarinet more poignantly beautiful.
Truly inspirational piece of music.
Llega a tener especial y profundo sentido cuando conoces la génesis de tan bella obra.
The ending of this idyll gave me the feeling of a peaceful death after Mahler 2nd symphony finale
Die Geigergarnele what is idyll ? What it means?
Oh yes Mahler's Second, a fitting companion to Wagner. Perhaps the only one.
@@zvezdinki7998 something like a peaceful state (of mind)
@@Operafreak9 nah, all Mahler symphonies apply
Erinyien Phantasm if this is possible for Wagner
Thank you so much for uploading the score for this masterpiece. I am making a transcription.
gespeeld in het Wagenings studentenorkest als concertmeester onder Dick Blokbergen in 1960-1961 mooie herinnering!
From the soul of Wagner ... to the hands of Sergiu Celibidache ... we are brought into the arms of God!
Regardless of what you may think of the piece itself, this has to rank as one of the greatest presents of all time, maybe THE greatest, especially when one considers the type of person Wagner was most of the time. Hopefully Cosima was appreciative!
Gorgeous. Simply gorgeous.
measure 340 for ex. : the sound every composer tried to reach later
Maestro, it's not slow ENOUGH--I'm still awake.
thanks for uploading
jumps of 9th on the strings, mediant modulation, we cannot employ it anymore like before...
Thank you for sharing
Measures 330 through 350 have to be the single most beautiful 20 measures in all music
If only Wagner wrote more orchestral works like this...
Absolutely. I mostly regret when the singers become involved. It just doesn't sound right: shrieking and growling and one can't understand a word anyway. This piece shows that opera is better without the singers.
@@christianwouters6764 lol
@@christianwouters6764 it is still good when. in real life they sound a lot better. It is only the recordings where it fails and can sound screechy.
@@christianwouters6764 - THIS IS A SPECIAL PIECE HE WROTE FOR HIS NEW WIFE FOR HER BIRTHDAY, AND HE WOKE HER UP TO AN ORCHESTRA PLAYING THIS AT THEIR HOUSE ONE CHRISTMAS MORNING, THIS WAS NEVER ANY PART OF AN OPERA, OR EVER HAD ANY SINGING - MYSELF I LIKE SOME OF THE GREAT OPERA ARIAS, BUT THE SINGING OF DIALOG IN AN OPERA I CAN DO WITHOUT, AND I KNOW WHAT YOU MEAN ABOUT THE SINGERS ....
@@chpnlzt ^ Why are you typing in all capitals?
19:50 Meistersinger
Bellissimo!
20:20 Very similar to a passage in Mahler's Totenfeier
It really is an extraordinary composition. I'm very fond of it and there are some moments that have me swooning. I think that was the intent? lol
Conduct minor string groups after 5 years in a conservatory and real love for Wagner this still my favorite. Wagner did this to Impress Nietche in some way. This is perfection even if you dont like it.
I wonder, and it is appreciated.
what?
Браво гениально написано и сыграно
Wagner's Siegfrield Idyll and Celibidache conducting are a sublime combination. Celibidache may be unorthodox in some of his slower conducting at times... but you know.. I appreciated it... Celibidache is Celibidache. He forces you to concentrate on the details.
Wagner was the greatest , what a piece. 21:41 to the end... Perfection.
Thanks, Larry David
nette Sendung, danke!
Happy Birthday Richard 🎉 🎂
Oh my god, it's Sergiu Celibidache
Wilhelm Richard Wagner (Saturday 22 May 1813 - Tuesday 13 February 1883).
Thank you Larry David
The clarinet makes a few wrong notes at 8:12, maybe he/she forgot to transpose the score.
Whut?
I decided to choose this piece for a BRIEF analysis in my music class. I couldn't help but write a 1000 word analysis just for the piece. The entire piece of word (including Wagner's biography) was 2000 words. His music is surreal, especially this piece that contrasts with his other works. His life is the one thing that bothers me... what a horrible man to write such amazing music!
A horrible man 🤔…
Why because he knew and spoke the truth about a certain t r i b e?
It’s the 21st century, there is way too much information that exists to remain in the dark!
@@truthfearsnoinvestigation eat slugs
@@truthfearsnoinvestigation like literally, phrases like these don't belong in this world at all!
@@arisowizard7178 what the truth?
The truth is only hate to those who hate the truth.
Believe me, a good composer could be as a butthole as imaginable. That certainly doesn't change the fact that they are a good composer.
Wells Cathedral School Showcase Concert on Saturday 4 May 2019
Chamber
Music
Thomas Nettle (conductor)
Springtime highlights from the School’s specialist musicians’ performance programme, including a rare chance to hear Wagner’s ultra-romantic Siegfried Idyll @t
Richard Wagner:Siegfried-Idill WWV 103
Müncheni Filharmonikus Zenekar
Vezényel:Sergiu Celibidache
Blijft mooi.
Wordt wakker met Wagners Siegfried Idyll en je dag kan niet meer stuk....
2:30 Sanctuary or Sleeping Brunnhilde
Larry David brought me here.
So what do you think of it?
catty else sublime 👍
Why didn’t you just give them candy?
Me too
How?
its silly how he makes me fell i lost the relation to the infinite
"how he makes me FALL......so uma notinha simpatica para voce.......
Wagners style of music has often been copied but it is just impossible to live up to the original ...
Im sorry were you whistling Wagner?
Curb lmao
Where could I buy this? Sorry struggling to find :(
Which is the chord played in 5:35?
Looks like a c-sharp minor (the sixth degree in E major) with E on the bass(first inversion) and a suspension of a fourth on the melody (the F sharp)
Yeah, it's a deceptive cadence, C# minor to F# 7 to G# minor(where B major was expected)
A wondrous work, perfect. I am ashamed that this man is generally avoided by the Mozart Bach people.
Is Richard Wagner avoided by Mozart Bach people? Or do you mean the conductor Sergiu Celibidache?
Bach and Wagner are my #1 and #2
@@andrewrichesson8627Same. St. Matthew Passion and Parsifal are the only works worthy to express God.
Thank you for posting this. I like the videos that help you to follow the score, but this performance is much too slow and overly indulgent.
I've always wondered if Cosima stayed in bed for the whole thing.
Another of those musical history "what if". What if Wagner could have written more chamber music like this? (The original performance was with solo strings.) I for one would have been happy if he had written those instead of Parsifal.
Wagner has a very big spirit, chamber music can't handle it enough, this piece is very intimate, chamber music is enough for this piece and was a "special edition " for Cosima.. a lot of parts in the dramas of Wagner have chamber parts, solo parts, etc... he is very dynamic, he goes from the easy thing to the maximum. Parsifal was necessary to do contrast with his other works, you see die meistersinger and it's very popular, you see tristan and it's very romantic, you see the nibelungen and you see fantasy and mythology, now needs the epic medieval theme so you get parsifal.. for me is the best drama
In my opinion, Wagners greatest but not only creativity and influence, lies in his innovation and unique handling of ORCHESTRAL music.... perhaps this is taken for granted by the modern listener, but if you place yourself in Wagners time, many of the sound innovations he made had never been heard before..... so... yes he could have written excellent chamber music, but Wagner's greatness lay elsewhere and he knew it.... There are also those who claim Wagner should have written more symphonic work instead of Opera, but again, his Operas allowed him the discriptive vehicle to become as creative in music as he did.... so the "what ifs" come to a dead end and as a composer Wagner made the right decisions at the right time under the right circumstances.
Harry Andruschak If you listen to Wagner’s mature worka in detail you will find that long passages are indeed the chamber music for which you yearn. For example, listen to the Siegmund\Sieglinde scene near the beginning of ‘Die Walkure’ -after the storm opening, Wagner uses a clarinet, a viola, a cello and a horn for much of the accompaniment. Passages like this are scattered throughout The Ring, Tristan und Isolde, Die Meistersinger and Parsifal. The big, powerful sections are the ones most often segmented in concert but there is much which is smaller in scale, more chamber-like and more intimate. Dive in and enjoy!
@@raticida123456 Parsifal was abolutely necessary for Wagner to complete what he had been saying throughout his career. It is a profound spiritual drama and Wagner was profoundly spiritual. He had to leave us the complete testament of his life's journey in music. Parsifal first occurred to him aas a drama in 1845. It was in 1882 he completed it and staged it. He knew, when he started he had alot to say before he could top of his lifework with Parsifal.
Thank God he wrote Parsifal instead.
"Wagner had never intended to publish this work, but financial problems forced him to make it public in 1877."
The man could never hold his money together. He should have gone and take an apprenticeship in accounting and finances with Verdi.
He has built his own theatre you moron!
@@tommot7755 He had to rely on his friendship with the king of Bavaria to fund it.
2:30 4:10 6:22 9:53 11:43 12:56 14:34
Wagner in human form
13:35
13:37 oh my god
17:27
He ain't no Mahler or Strauss but he'll do. Just kidding.
Odious creature that he was, he wrote well, there is no denying that. Prelude to Tristan und Isolde is the height of Romanticism and utterly ravishing.
5:03
Please watch this at the lowest quality only (144p) since it's just for the music, which is much more ecologically responsible than at a higher rate. Watching this at 240p (which is unnecessary for listening purposes), will increase the bandwith by double to almost tenfold! At 1080 the bandwith is augmented by a factor of 100!
The use of digital technology accounts for 4% of the world's greenhouse gas emissions, as much as the emissions from the world's truck fleet. Of that, a BIG part comes from livestreaming videos, mainly 3 sources : UA-cam, Netflix and porn.
Let's enjoy this beautiful music by being aware and responsible, doing our little part in decreasing our carbon footprint and protecting this wonderful planet for the generations to come.
Take a bath I’m watching this in 720p
@@Kyle-ur4mr So badass man.
ua-cam.com/video/lITBGjNEp08/v-deo.html
Well, do you really think us, the youtube watchers, numbered in the billions should be responsible for the emissions of youtube? Shouldn't it be youtube's responsibility to use clean energy?
@@kallehed6330 Who is at fault? The prostitute or the client? The drug dealer or the consumer? The guns dealer or the warlord? Well, actually, everyone involved is responsible of their own choices. You are not the one who decides youtube's energy supply strategy, but you CAN choose to watch a video at a lower resolution. There's no such thing as "clean" energy, what you need to understand is that the more the demand of energy is, the higher the stress on the environment will be in order to meet that high demand. Fossil fuels are used because they are extremely energy-intensive (much more so than any other energy source, even nuclear), so they provide enough energy for our high demanding energy needs. It is only by SEVERELY reducing our energy needs that these needs can be able to be met using only carbon-free energy sources.
I bet Mahler secretly wished he'd written this. The Adagietto from the 5th to me is Mahler's Siegfried Idyll
Sounds like "home".
can someone please tell me how i pronounce this phonetically?
the piece's name. thanks
seeg-freed i-dill
Wagner did nothing wrong seeg-freed ee-dill
Actually not seeg- but zeeg- ...
Oh yes, you are right... zeeg....
❤❤
❤💐🎧🌱
*Nothing is worth the entire opera. I am always terrified at seeing people who are satisfied with Wagner extracts.*
9:28
14:10
I don't want to be mean, but Wagner, this piece is just... it doesn't go anywhere, it's just the same theme played over and over again, without any clear development. Like, I like everything that you wrote, it's beautiful, the hamony is longing and epic, the melodies are exceptional, but that's just one part of a composition. You have to do something with it you know, you have to have drama, the music should convey a story, it should be more than just beauty. This composition almost feels like a parody of your own music, like, how terrible can I make the music, while still making people like it, just because "oooh beatiful melodyy". Or maybe I'm just tired of hearing this overly romantic harmony, but idk, this music feels kind of shallow, it doesn't feel "real", it feels fake.
Interesting take... What do you think of Strauss's "Metamorphosen"?
@@j.masonbrown6216 Just listened to it for the first time, I liked it. It's kind of overwhelming, wish there was more silence, still has really great moments. Definitely has an effect on you like a good movie has with it's soundtrack, it definitely feels like a story, something bigger. Interesting Beethoven quote at the end.
It moves you, though it kind of gives me a headache as well. I think Strauss should work on the balance, needs more soft parts and less forte definitely. Good piece though
There's plenty of development in Wagner; not all music has to tell a story IMO.
come può un anarchico scrivere certe cose
Too Slow, drags on forever.
Go listen to modern trash then.
@Asriel Meemurr Just telling the truth, sorry it hurts
@Asriel Meemurr Art is art, and modern trash should be in the bin where it belongs.
@@TheOneAndOnlyZeno proud of your own short sightedness
@@95julius02 Proud that I have standards and recognize Diamonds from a fake glass forgery.
If you had run into Liszt and Wagner when they had association and they invited you to join them for a walk or a dinner or a tree-full chat in the shade or by a winter fire hearth, then you would have had all the art genuine injected into you in those minutes that any (and I mean most who desired to be artists and realistically flatly failed to amount to anything with a subject 'muse) living romantic artist wanted-to-be could capture in all your life of struggle and failure...you would have had their forgotten moment. And would have traded all. ALL, for that moment.
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Larry David brought me here
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